Milk Allergy Diet

General guidelines for milk allergy

The key to an allergy-free diet is to stay away from foods or products containing the food to which you are allergic. The items that you are allergic to are called allergens. Milk allergy is most common among infants and young children. Common forms of milk are cream, cheese, butter, ice cream, and yogurt. Milk and milk products may also be used as ingredients in many other foods. To stay away foods that contain milk and milk products, you must read food labels.

Important information about avoiding milk and milk products

The Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act (FALCPA) is a law that requires U.S. packaged foods to state clearly on the label if they contain milk.

The wordnondairy on a product label means it does not contain butter, cream, or milk. But the food may have other milk-containing ingredients.

Kosher foods are labeled with a circled K or U. These foods may also have the word pareveor parve. This means the food is free of milk and milk products. A D for dairy on a product label next to the K or U means the product contains milk or milk products. Stay away from these products.

Processed meats often contain milk. These include hot dogs, sausages, and lunch or deli meats. Carefully read all food labels.

How to read a label for a milk-free diet

Always read the entire ingredient label to look for milk. Milk ingredients may be in the ingredient list. Or milk could be listed in a “contains milk” statement after the ingredient list. Stay away from foods that have any of the following ingredients:

Artificial butter flavor

Butter, butter fat, butter oil

Casein, casein hydrolysates

Caseinates (ammonium, calcium, magnesium, potassium, sodium)

Cheese, cottage cheese

Cream

Custard, pudding

Ghee

Half and half

Hydrolysates (casein, milk protein, protein, whey, whey protein)

Lactalbumin, lactalbumin phosphate

Lactoglobulin, lactoferrin

Lactose, lactulose

Milk

Derivative, protein, solids, malted, condensed, evaporated, or dry

Whole, low-fat, nonfat, skim

Goat's milk and milk from other animals

A2 milk

Nisin

Nougat

Recaldent

Rennet casein

Sour cream or sour cream solids

Whey (delactosed, demineralized, protein concentrate)

Yogurt

Other possible sources of milk or milk products

Other sources of milk or milk products include:

Brown sugar flavoring

Caramel flavoring

Chocolate

Flavorings (natural and artificial)

High protein flour

Lactose

Luncheon meats, hot dogs, sausages

Margarine

Simplesse

Important points

Foods that don't contain milk could be contaminated during manufacturing. Advisory statements are not regulated by the FDA. They are voluntary. These include labels such as "processed in a facility that also processed milk." Or "made on shared equipment." Ask your healthcare provider if you can eat foods with these labels. Or if you should stay away from them.

Some foods and products are not covered by the FALCPA law. These include:

Foods that are not regulated by the FDA

Cosmetics and personal care items

Prescription and over-the-counter medicines and supplements

Toys, crafts, and pet foods

When you are eating out

Always carry 2 epinephrine autoinjectors. Make sure you and those close to you know how to use it.